Bookshelf Review: The Last Boy

2010 title

Mickey Mantle and the End of America’s Childhood, by Janey Leavy. Harper, 2010. If she’s not careful, Jane Leavy will earn a reputation as the Boswell of the battered ballplayer. In 2002, she wrote the definitive biography (to this point) of the role model to Jewish boomers everywhere in Sandy Koufax: A Lefty’s Legacy. In […]

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This week (Nov. 8) in Sports Illustrated

Magazines

Go, Giants! They get the cover story treatment from Tom Verducci (Giant Moment). But that’s it for awhile, I fear.

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Lest we forget: Sparky Anderson

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

That was quick, and perhaps for the best. “If it were done, when ’tis done, then twere well it were done quickly.”

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Lest we forget: Clyde King

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

The former Dodger and Reds pitcher and Giants, Braves, and Yankees manager (62 games in 1982), died today at the age of 86. He published his memoirs — A King’s Legacy: The Clyde King Story — in 1999. This, strangely, is one of my favorite cards of King, taken back in the day when Topps […]

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Sad news about Sparky

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

From ESPN.com: Former Detroit Tigers and Cincinnati Reds manager Sparky Anderson has been placed in hospice care at his Thousands Oaks, Calif., home for complications resulting from dementia. Anderson, 76, was one of the first baseball personalities I ever interviewed. It occurred shortly after his book They Call Me Sparky came out in the late […]

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Literary birthday greetings: Rapid Robert

Autobiography/memoirs

Bob Feller, one of the fastest pitchers in Major League history, turns 92 today. Feller was one of those “Greatest Americans” who served in combat in World War II (as opposed to ballplayers who continued to play, albeit within the confines of military service). He lost more than three prime years. Several sabermetricians have posited […]

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Not the last post on The Last Boy

2010 title

Thanks to Greg Spira for this list of links to reviews of Jane Leavy’s latest: The Cleveland Plain Dealer The Oregonian Dallas Morning News Christian Science Monitor (author interview) Ottawa Citizen CBS News (feature with excerpt) Los Angeles Times SecondAct.com (feature) Here’s another from the Watching the Game blog, which is quickly becoming one of […]

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Because you could keep this on a bookshelf

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

If you thought it was worth that much. “Sammy Sosa bat doesn’t sell” Speaking of bats, they’re still the comic book weapon of choice.

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Literary birthday greetings: The Dutch Master and Amiable Al

Biography

Johnny Vander Meer, owner of one record that is unlikely to be broken, was born this date in 1914. The Dutch Master, The Life And Times Of Johnny Vander Meer, by Paul Lichtman Also born on Nov. 2, Al Campanis, the Dodgers’ baseball lifer who made an infamous name for himself with his remarks about […]

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Lest we forget: Richard “Dick” Williams

Because I can...

You won’t find this particular Dick Williams on Baseball-Reference.com or in The Baseball Encyclopedia. This Dick Williams was a member of the Bombers, my team at Yankees Fantasy Camp just about a year ago. Yesterday I received the sad news that he had died at the age of 76 from a massive heart attack. Williams […]

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Literary birthday greetings: Fernando and Vic Power

Biography

Fernando Valenzuela hits the big Five-Oh today. As a rookie in the strike-shortened 1981 season he won the hearts and imaginations of baseball fans everywhere — as well as the Rookie of the Year and Cy Young Award — and years later got a shout-out from Annie savoy in Bull Durham. The impetus behind “Fernandomania” […]

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Literary birthday greetings: Mick the Quick

Biography

Mickey Rivers turns 62 today. Rivers was one of the ex-Yankees down in Florida last year when I attended Fantasy Camp. He wasn’t one of my coaches, so I didn’t have too much interaction with him. But one indelible memory: After the games one day, the campers and staff gathered in the plush snack bar […]

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Literary baseball greetings: Big Ed and Memphis Bill

Biography

Marking the occasion: Ed Delahanty and Bill Terry. Born in 1867, Delahanty was one of the games first superstars, plying his trade for the primarily for the Philadelphia Phillies in the 1980s. In his 16 year career, he batted .346 with 101 home runs and 1,466 RBIs. He met his fate under odd circumstances that […]

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This happens in my house every other day

"Oddballs"

but I don’t go making a video about it.

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TWIBB: Oct. 30, 2010

2009 title

The top baseball books, according to Amazon.com as of Oct. 30 at 1 p.m. Title Rank General The Last Boy: Mickey Mantle and the End of America’s Childhood , by Jane Leavy 1 Beyond Belief: Finding the Strength to Come Back, by Josh Hamilton and Tim Keown 2 Moneyball: The Art of Winning an Unfair […]

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Question: Who’s the real alien?

Because I can...

Answer: It’s a trick question. These are all fictional characters with huge craniums (crania?). And while we’re at it… I’m as patriotic as the next guy, but isn’t there a better way to spend our resources than to have expensive flyovers during sporting events? Seriously, how much do these things cost. And for what? A […]

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Jewish Sports Review celebrates a simcha

Magazines

(with a side of shameless self-promotion. A “simcha” is a joyous occasion.) From the Jewish Telegraphic Agency: Duo celebrating bar mitzva of counting Jewish athletes Edmon J. Rodman OCT. 28 — Down in Texas, the Rangers have an All-Star second baseman who has added flavor and flair to the 2010 season, helping propel his team […]

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Brian Wilson, meet Brian Wilson

"Oddballs"

(Because I keep LPs on my bookshelf.) How cool would it be if the Giants’ closer actually used “Little Surfer Girl” as his march-in music?

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How do you make a Texas-San Francisco World Series palatable to New Yorkers?

World Series

Find any link you can, because goodness knows, if it’s not “about them,” they ain’t interested. Fox TV Blackout Tests Old Giants Fans’ Ingenuity Anything Can Happen in a San Francisco Series A First in Either San Francisco or Texas On the other hand, there’s a neat feature on  World Series gloves through the years. […]

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Holy Honus!

"Oddballs"

Nuns selling rare Honus Wagner card [T]he Baltimore-based School Sisters of Notre Dame… are auctioning off the card, which despite its poor condition is expected to fetch between $150,000 and $200,000. The proceeds will go to their ministries in 35 countries around the world.

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